Gogebic Taconite (G-Tac), a subsidiary of The Cline Group, has proposed a 4 ½-mile long open pit iron ore mine in the Penokee Hills of Northern Wisconsin. This would be the first phase of an eventual 22-mile strip of open-pit mining, stretching from west of Mellen, in southern Ashland County, to Upson, in Iron County. The land is privately-held managed forest land, 35 square miles of rugged and unbroken north woods habitat, a migration corridor and natural carbon sink.

A February, 2012 report suggests that over a 35 year life span, the mine would ship 25% more ore than the everything taken out of Gogebic Range mines between 1880 and 1966, with waste rock that could form a hill 500 feet high and 1.5 miles long (the size of Rib Mountain), and tailings that, if stacked evenly over 3,750 acres of land leased by G-Tac from Iron County, would be 47 feet deep. A separate geological study by Lawrence University researchers found that the first phase of the mine alone would produce 2.5 billion pounds of sulfur from pyrite (iron sulfide) in the waste rock, which would produce sulfuric acid and sulfates when exposed to air and water. The acid mine drainage would leach other heavy metals present in the waste rock, including arsenic, copper, mercury, and zinc. The waste rock is also laced with phosphorous, a major water pollutant.

What’s at stake?

The mine area is at the headwaters of the Tyler Forks and Bad Rivers, which flow north into the Bad River Indian Reservation and empty into Lake Superior at the Kakagon Sloughs, the largest wetlands on Lake Superior and a major source of wild rice for the Bad River Anishinaabe (Ojibwe/Chippewa) Tribe. The potential mining zone impacts more than 50 miles of streams and rivers, many of them designated trout streams. It is in the recharge zone of the Penokee Aquifer, which many residents rely on for clean drinking water. Mining would transform the area from forested hills to an industrial strip, with heavy machinery, truck traffic, deep pits, and waste rock piles hundreds of feet high.

Iron Mining: What's the Record?

Thanks to a twenty-year grassroots struggle by a coalition of environmental organizations, sportsmen’s groups, and Native American tribes in Wisconsin, in 1998 the state passed a law (signed by then-governor Tommy Thompson) prohibiting sulfide mining in the state until mining companies can show an example of an environmentally safe sulfide mine. To date, one has never been found. Sulfide mining targets minerals like copper, lead, zinc, gold, and silver that are contained in sulfide ores, which generate sulfuric acid when exposed to air and water. But G-Tac’s proposal is for an iron mine, not a sulfide mine, and thus doesn’t fall under the perview of Wisconsin’s mining moratorium law.

However, iron mining isn’t “safe” either. Downstream from Minnesota’s MesabiIronRange, the St. Louis River is polluted with high levels of mercury and sulfates, resulting in fish consumption advisories and a 100-mile-long wild rice “dead zone.” That’s because to get to the iron, a vast amount of overlying rock must be removed, some of which contains heavy metals and sulfides. In the Penokees, the overlying rock is known to contain Pyrite (iron sulfide), and sulfide deposits exist on the western and eastern ends of the range, and possibly elsewhere.

The communities of the Mesabi Range haven’t consistently benefited from mining economically, either. IronRange economies are very volatile, with wide “boom/bust” swings in employment depending on world metal prices. Technological advancement has meant steadily increasing productivity and fewer workers needed to mine. Powerful mining corporations often influence state governments to avoid paying a fair share of taxes to benefit the communities they impact.

Defending Their Homes

Native American reservations have been disproportionately impacted by mining and often treated as lawless zones by mining corporations. Environmental Racism occurs when historically oppressed peoples (like Native Americans) have their living conditions degraded disproportionately to wealthier, white communities. The voices of these peoples get ignored by industrial corporations and the government officials they fund or influence. Environmental Justice is what people in solidarity with the oppressed can demand of corporations and their elected officials.

The Bad River Ojibwe Tribe opposes the Penokee Mine and has been pro-active in fighting to defend the land and water. The EPA recently approved a new set of tribal water quality standards that prohibit any projects upstream from polluting waters flowing into their reservation. They are seeking Class 1 Air Quality designation, which would further federally protect their region from mining. Finally, the Tribe released a set of ten principles for any changes to mining laws, that would protect the environment and cultural resources for future generations:

1. Exclude any project proposal that has the potential to cause acid mine drainage.

2. The burden of preparing and submitting a complete application should be entirely on the permit applicant.

3. Provide adequate time for the DNR, the public, federal agencies, and affected Indian tribes to fully review and participate in the process.

6. Allow contested case hearings with full participation by citizens, including Indian tribes.

8. Allow citizen suits to make sure permit provisions and legal restrictions on new mines will be enforced.

9. Require consultation with Indian tribes by the DNR as part of the permitting process.

10. Contested case hearings should be paid for by the permit applicant or the state.

“The BadRiver watershed is a Wisconsin gem and pristine environmental resource, and the Band’s cultural identity and way of life is highly dependent upon maintaining the health and integrity of the watershed.”

–BadRiver Tribal Chairman Mike Wiggins

“This is our land. This is where we live. We can't just pack up and move."

–BadRiver Tribal Councilor Frank Connors

What's Next?

On March 11, 2013, Governor Scott Walker signed AB 1, the open-pit mining bill written by lawyers for Gogebic taconite and paid for with $15.6 million in pro-mine campaign contributions, into law. This ecocidal legislation comes as a body blow to the rights of the Bad River Ojibwe and everyone else in the state to clean water and a sustainable local economy. It prioritizes the ability of a billionaire-owned mining company to make a profit over public health and environmental safety.

Exploratory drilling took place in June and July, 2013, leaving behind mud and invasive grasses at eight drill sites and along the access roads. G-Tac used private security guards armed with automatic weapons to guard the mine site until it was discovered the security firm did not have a license to operate in Wisconsin. Despite these intimidation tactics, the Lac Court Orielles Tribe's Harvest and Education Learning Project (HELP) camp brought over 5,000 visitors to the mine site through the summer and fall. Scientists scrutinized the rock at proposed bulk sampling sites and found abundant asbestos-like grunerite. In response, while absurdly denying the presence of these fibers, the company removed the sites where they were found from their bulk sampling plan at the same time they got the legislature to pass a law granting G-Tac special privileges to close off their managed forest land to the public during mining activity.

But concerned citizens have defied the "off-limits zone" within 600 feet of access roads and work sites to continue to protest G-Tac's presence and monitor their bulk sampling activity. As of this writing, there have been no citations or arrests. Meanwhile, a Spanish provincial court has indicted G-Tac president Bill Williams on charges of Crimes Against the Environment for his role in directing the Cobre Las Cruces copper mine to inject arsenic into the local aquifer. That mine was earlier cited by Williams as an example of environmentally "safe" mining techniques that the company planned to use in Wisconsin. The Iron County Board, which has been accused of corruption and pandering to G-Tac, faces an unprecedented election in which 10 seats are contested (in a county where no seats are usually contested) by mine opponents. Stay tuned as the saga continues...